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> Who wants to give over their financial life to a computer program?

Where do you think your income and bank balances are tracked and stored? On pieces of paper?




This is missing the point to a degree that makes me think you're being intentionally obtuse, but maybe you're just ignorant so I'll bite. Banking computer errors can easily be rectified by humans, banks are regulated, your funds are at least partially guaranteed by the government (depending on where you live). The degree to which you're trusting computer programs with your finances is orders of magnitude less than with cryptocurrency where it's possible to lose any amount $ of asset value in an instant with absolutely no means of recourse.

Your bank analogy is silly and nowhere near analogous.


CitiBank can't get the money back they accidentally transferred to another company.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-08-15/citi-sues...

You can say that's an edge case today but I and OP are saying, the future will look more like crypto looks today. Not a bright future.


>CitiBank can't get the money back they accidentally transferred to another company.

Given it was an accidental early repayment of a loan, this isn't quite the slam dunk you think it is. If they had paid a company they didn't owe money to, they could get the money back through the courts.

Crypto is meant to evade those courts.


The reason was not because of a repayment but because you wouldn't expect a respectable bank like CitiBank to do such a mistake.

> “To believe that Citibank, one of the most sophisticated financial institutions in the world, had made a mistake that had never happened before, to the tune of nearly $1 billion, would have been borderline irrational,” he wrote.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/16/business/citibank-revlon-...

That's as close to "code is law" and other nonsense of the crypto libertarians as you can get.


Not really. Right in the paragraph above that one:

> Recipients of cash wired in error are typically required to return it.


> I and OP are saying, the future will look more like crypto looks today. Not a bright future.

I don’t agree. I trust that loopholes like that will be slowly rectified with legislation if not present today.

In fact, it’s likely that crypto will (problematically?) be heading the same way. There was a recent case of a crypto buff who found a bug in some project and made off with a few $Million and I think the courts said he could be arrested and expected to return it, just as if he made off with cash. Importantly, they basically said “blockchain isn’t the source of truth to the courts” which was the guys defense. IMO a bright future for people, but not for a crypto venture.


> he could be arrested and expected to return it, just as if he made off with cash.

You have cash in your house and someone breaks in to steal everything. The insurance will _maybe_ cover your loss given that you secured it with basic security. _Maybe_ the police will investigate and arrest the burglar.

But even in this situation, you were better off putting your savings in any bank account where any fraudulent transaction can be reverted with a button.

Now, you have your crypto wallet. It gets emptied by some random bot. Well, you are as fucked than with your cash, except that nobody will cover your loss and nobody will investigate your case since the burglar is probably from another country.


By cash I meant fiat. But yea crypto adds a lot of risk to storing your monies.

You can insure the crypto you have. It’s probs expensive to the point of being not worth it.

People investigate crypto hacks though. And if the perpetrators are in a jurisdiction that you have some legal availability to you can totally use legal means. Basically any western nation will allow such a suit.

https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2021/12/22/teenage-suspect-i...




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